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‘Outraged, not surprised': Pro-Palestine student protesters face expulsion and suspension

‘Outraged, not surprised': Pro-Palestine student protesters face expulsion and suspension

News.com.au02-06-2025
The University of Melbourne has formally notified four student activists that they are being recommended for expulsion and suspension, Unimelb for Palestine student group revealed on Monday.
If the recommendations are upheld, the students will become the first pro-Palestine activists to be expelled over their protest actions in Australia.
Two student organisers have been notified they 'are getting expelled, and another two have been suspended,' a statement from Unimelb for Palestine said.
'If these decisions are upheld, Unimelb will become the first University in so-called Australia to expel students for protesting the genocide in Gaza.' the statement continued.
'The University of Melbourne has taken the extreme step of issuing expulsions and suspensions to students who participated in a peaceful protest.
'We were outraged, but not surprised.'
The final decision now rests on the universities new Vice Chancellor Emma Johnston, who has been in her position for less than a year.
In a statement to the Herald Sun, she said the University respects the rights of individuals to protest, which has not changed.
'Universities are places where free and open debate must take place, but the safety of our students and staff must also be protected as this is integral to enabling free and open debate.
'It's our responsibility to respond to any actions that may intimidate or threaten the safety of students and staff on our campuses. These matters are taken seriously and addressed under the appropriate policy which may include disciplinary procedures.'
The students participated in a sit in at Jewish academic Steven Prawer's office, which ended only after police were called to disband protesters.
Mr Prawer was specifically targeted as students campaigned for their university to cut ties with Israeli institutions, and Mr Prawer is affiliated with the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
The sit in was during height of a period of protests, where students hitched tents over campus in a peaceful protest.
The universities major Arts West building was also occupied in May 2024, disrupting more than 16,800 students as classes and exams were all impacted.
'The University respects the rights of individuals to protest – this has not changed,' Ms Johnston said.
'Universities are places where free and open debate must take place, but the safety of our students and staff must also be protected as this is integral to enabling free and open debate. 'It's our responsibility to respond to any actions that may intimidate or threaten the safety of students and staff on our campuses.
'These matters are taken seriously and addressed under the appropriate policy which may include disciplinary procedures.'
If Ms Johnston signs of on the expulsions and suspensions, the students will have 30 days to appeal.
Unimelb for Palestine are now campaigning to pressure Ms Johnston, who led her university's student union in the 1990s, to refrain from accepting the 'pathetic and desperate move from University executives'.
This comes after the Australian National University's expulsion Beatrice Tucker over her support for Hamas on ABC radio was overturned on appeal.
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A young woman was murdered in Central Queensland 58 years ago. Her suspected killer never faced justice
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It's been well over half a century, but Shirley Eldridge vividly remembers the chilling late-night phone call. It was March 9, 1967, and at the end of the line was the worried mother of her friend and co-worker, Mima McKim-Hill. Mima, 21, hadn't returned home from a work trip in Central Queensland. "I knew something had happened," recalls Shirley, then 20. Seventeen days later, her worst fears materialised. On Easter Sunday, Mima's body was found dumped in a small waterhole in bushland at Collard Creek, off the Dawson Highway, near Biloela. She'd been abducted, strangled and sexually assaulted. "I just collapsed," Shirley says. The brutal crime rocked the close-knit community. A police investigation and an inquest yielded no results. Months gave way to years without any arrests, and the case became Central Queensland's longest-running unsolved murder. As the decades passed, Shirley's frustration became all-consuming. In the 2000s, she launched her own quest for answers, teaming up with retired Vietnam veteran and amateur super sleuth, Trevor Sorenson. Together they dug deeper, analysing hundreds of pages of inquest transcripts, reinterviewing witnesses, revisiting crime scenes and dissecting Mima's final steps. What they uncovered was a web of lies and a litany of investigative errors that they allege helped her suspected killer slip through the cracks. Their dogged pursuit for justice reignited public interest and police agreed to reopen the investigation in 2008. A breakthrough came in 2009, more than 40 years after Mima's death. Detectives closed in on a suspect. Mr Sorenson says they had enough evidence to "nail him". But they were too late. Shirley and Mima worked at the Capricornia Regional Electricity Board (CREB) in Rockhampton, a then-small country town with deep agricultural roots. The women regularly travelled throughout the region, demonstrating new electrical appliances for customers. They quickly grew close. In many ways, Shirley says, they were "polar opposites". "We'd be walking along together and someone on a construction site would wolf-whistle. My thing was, I'd just walk on. Mima turned around and said: 'Oh, drop dead'," Shirley laughs. "That was Mima. The pair joined a local theatre and were both cast in an upcoming production, just weeks before Mima's death. "She never got to play her role," Shirley says. The morning of March 9, 1967 began like any other at the McKim-Hill residence. Around 8:00am, Mima said goodbye to her mother and left for a scheduled work trip to Biloela, a couple of hours' drive south-west from Rockhampton, with her boss, Isobel Hare, 33. They took the company station wagon for the journey. Instead, they ended up heading south to Calliope, near Gladstone, to meet up with Isobel's boyfriend, Arthur Brambrick. Isobel arranged for Mima to pick her up in town in the afternoon and the pair went their separate ways. 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Mima's brown handbag was perched on the backseat, with cash and some coins still inside. Her savings book was also intact. The rear vision mirror had been pulled off and the fuse box was dangling. "At this point, in my mind, it's like, Mima's out there in trouble," Shirley says. A bright pink fabric-covered button under the front seat caught Shirley's eye. It matched a new outfit Mima was planning to wear at a social club function that night. Believing Mima was with her boyfriend, Shirley says Isobel asked her to drive the car back to Rockhampton to return it to their employer. Mima was listed as a missing person the next day. While being questioned by detectives, Shirley says she offered to take them to the site where the car was abandoned. But they weren't interested. More than a fortnight later, on March 26, Alexander Weir was travelling with his family to Biloela when they pulled up at Collard Creek, approximately 80 kilometres from where Mima's car was found. He saw a rag in a running stream and tried to flick it with a stick. A human leg emerged from the water. Mima's father was called to identify the remains. Her body was badly decomposed. Isobel's yellow uniform that had been in the back of their work vehicle was tied around Mima's neck. Her cause of death was ruled as asphyxiation from strangulation. Her arm was broken. There was evidence of sexual assault. "Mima was incredibly strong … but police told me she stood no chance," Shirley says. Mr Sorenson believes the initial police investigation was a "shemozzle from the outset". Detectives from Brisbane were called in to assist local police and immediately pulled rank, he says, and Rockhampton officers relied on reports in the local newspaper to keep abreast of the situation. "They wanted to run the show, they did not want to work with the regional detectives … they were kept at an arm's length," Mr Sorenson says. "It wasn't until six weeks after the vehicle was located and four weeks after Mima's body was found that the Brisbane detectives decided to have critical and important locations … photographed by a police photographer such as where the abandoned CREB vehicle was located," he adds. Witness statements weren't taken until after Mima's body was found. "Those statements were taken basically on the run," he says. "They were hand-written, scrawled, taken on the bonnet of a car or on the side of the road." All leads went nowhere and an inquest into Mima's murder began in earnest in November 1967. It was overseen by five different coroners, none of whom had "any of the legal qualifications that they're required to have today", Mr Sorenson says. Shirley gave evidence and was reprimanded for insisting there were signs of a struggle where the vehicle was found, which police denied. "The coroner interrupted and threatened to hold me in contempt of court if I continued to contradict," she says. 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